
‘Baffles me': Anger over Rockliff vote
As Tasmania prepares to return to the polls, Liberal senator Jonathon Duniam has criticised the success of the no-confidence vote against Jeremy Rockliff on Thursday night.
The state's embattled Liberal premier lost a no-confidence motion by just one vote after two days of fiery debate – a decision that ended his term as premier and toppled the minority government at 3.30pm on Thursday.
Mr Rockcliff visited Lieutenant Governor Christopher Shanahan at Government House early Thursday evening to inform him that he had lost the confidence of the parliament and to seek permission to resume parliament next week to pass legislation so public servants could be paid.
He has not yet stepped down as premier, with the date of an election yet to be determined. The state's embattled Liberal premier Jeremy Rockliff has lost a no-confidence motion. NewsWire/ Nikki Davis-Jones Credit: News Corp Australia
Liberal senator Jonathon Duniam has told ABC News he is 'angry' with the result and the decision to head back to the polls.
'Thirty-five members of the Tasmanian government in their collective wisdom to not find a way to not send Tasmanians back to an election just baffles me,' he said on Friday morning.
'The Labor Party obviously had their concerns, they told us all what they were, but the beauty of a hung parliament, which is what the Tasmanian parliament currently is, is an opposition can work with a crossbench, and indeed the government, to make change.
'No gvernment has the capacity just to ram bills through, so I don't understand why Labor, instead of putting this no-confidence motion forward and successfully so sending us to the polls, didn't just seek to amend the Bill, or do the budget bills, or something similar.'
Senator Duniam said it was the responsibility of those who voted for the motion to 'go out and speak … on why they're going back to the polls'. Liberal senator Jonathon Duniam said he was 'angry' at Thursday night's outcome. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
'Dean Winter, but for his desire to be premier at any cost, did not need to send us here,' he added.
'I don't know what the Labor Party actually is going to offer at this election.
'They didn't offer an alternative budget of any substance, so what they're going to be asking Tasmanians to vote for remains a mystery.'
The Liberal government will 'reflect' on the recent happenings, but Senator Duniam, who was highly critical of the party's federal campaign, believes a 'constructive approach' rather than an election was needed.
'Woe betide any political party that forgets that they need to listen to the people they seek votes from and seek to represent in parliament,' he added.
'What we (federal Liberal) did wrong was we forgot to communicate with the people of Australia and they didn't vote for us, of course. Senator Duniam, who was highly critical of the party's federal campaign, believes a 'constructive approach' rather than an election was needed. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
'There's a chance that if this election does come to pass that the Liberal Party can actually go out and make sure they are listening to the people of Tasmania and responding to their needs.'
Opposition Leader Dean Winter has ruled out forming a government with the support of the Greens and the crossbench.
Mr Rockcliff took the top job just 439 days ago in the election that marked the party's fourth consecutive term since gaining power at the 2014 election.
Governor Barbara Baker is expected to return from overseas on the weekend before parliament resumes on Tuesday morning.

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He had a message for Mr Pesutto or Mrs Deeming if the outcome of the meeting did not go their way. "Should any person wake up unhappy tomorrow, I would say to them, 'Have a look around and smell the roses and let's see what Victoria really needs'," Mr Battin said. "They need an opposition whose ready to govern and we'll ensure that is us." A state Liberal party has come to the financial rescue of its axed leader to spare him from bankruptcy and avoid a politically dangerous by-election. The Victorian Liberals' administrative committee met on Thursday night and agreed to lend former leader John Pesutto $1.55 million to settle his debt to first-term MP Moira Deeming. The party will pay the money directly to Mrs Deeming and Mr Pesutto will be required to repay the loan at market-rate interest. In a letter to party members, Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis said the outcome would ensure there was no by-election in Mr Pesutto's marginal seat of Hawthorn. "Settling this matter once and for all is in the interests of the party as it will see an end to the ongoing commentary that is letting Labor get away with their appalling performance," he wrote. The Hawthorn MP was ordered to pay $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis. It left him facing bankruptcy, which would trigger his exit from parliament and a subsequent by-election, unless the debt was paid back in a matter of weeks. Mr Pesutto, who has already coughed up $315,000 in damages, had raised only about $750,000 through wealthy backers and a GoFundMe campaign. An offer to defer some of the legal bill in exchange for Mrs Deeming's guaranteed preselection and Mr Pesutto swearing off trying to return as leader for three years were rebuffed. Entering parliament on Thursday morning, Mr Pesutto was upbeat about the committee agreeing to his loan request. "I certainly hope it gets resolved," he said. "Tonight's an opportunity to square (the issue) off and put it all behind us." Mrs Deeming, who was expelled from the party room before being welcomed back in December, was sceptical it would end the infighting that has engulfed the party since March 2023. "I assume that they will continue with their quest to try to annihilate me," the upper house MP said. Mrs Deeming said the party can "do what they like" but she would take any support of Mr Pesutto as a "direct rebukement (sic)" of the court judgement. She said her party room colleagues "don't speak to me" because she "had the audacity to defend myself against false claims". "Some of them are very nice," Mrs Deeming said. "But I really do get treated as though it is my fault and that I'm the aggressor, and that's ridiculous." 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